Posted Huffington Post on 01/26/2012Nothing brings the believer closer to the Creator than prayer.
With it mind and soul are brought to communicate with their Sustainer in
communion and spirituality.
It is common to hear comments on the way that Muslims pray.
Muslims perform their ritual daily prayers, or Salaat, five times a
day. This is done at dawn, after noon time, at mid afternoon, after sunset, and
after the full darkness of night. Through prayer the believer appears
before the divine presence of the All Hearing to present their worship,
gratitude, and petitions to the Creator of all. Standing, kneeling and
prostrating we affirm: “Thee do we serve and Thee do we beseech for help.” (Qur’an
1:5) The exclusive worship and petitions to our Lord are the main purpose of
prayer. This is the same rationale that Jesus, the Messiah, recognized when he
answered the pleading from the distressed believer asking him: “…teach
us to pray, as John also taught his disciples.” (Luke 11: 1)
Jesus immediately followed up teaching them the Lord’s Prayer: a perfect
expression of worship, petition, and thankfulness directed exclusively to our
Creator. This last Bible quote confirms that Jesus was not the
first of the Lord’s envoys sent to teach the disciples how to pray. John,
referred to in the Qur’an as Prophet Yahya, the Lord’s messenger
and predecessor to Jesus, was also tasked to teach his disciples how to pray.
It was this way, through His prophets and messengers, that Al Hamid,
God the All Praiseworthy, has taught all previous generations of
believers; and will teach all future ones until the end of times.
The believer’s manifest need for prayer was accomplished by
Moses, John the Baptist, Jesus, and Muhammad. This evidence shows us that we,
being much more vulnerable than they, have an even more compelling need for
prayer. The community of believers who abandon prayer will fail and be
lost.
During their Salaat (formal ritual prayers) and
their Du’as (spontaneous supplications) Muslims engage
in a genuine communication with the Lord. Contrary to popular belief, the
formalities of their five daily Salaat prayers were not first
established by Prophet Muhammad. The formalities of the Muslim prayer
were rather rescued from ritual practices abandoned by their Jewish and
Christian predecessors with the passage of time. Forms like the ablutions
(ritual washing before prayer); kneeling, and prostrating were practiced by the
community of believers long before Jesus’ and Muhammad’s birth; and are well
described in the Hebrew Bible and the Gospels. Unfortunately some of these
significant and transcendental forms have been completely abandoned by Jewish
and Christian traditions, as it is the case of the sublime practice of prostration
in worship to the Creator. In the past Jews prostrated humbly to their
Lord: “Jehoshaphat bowed his head with his face to the ground, and
all Judah and the inhabitants of Jerusalem fell down before the LORD,
worshiping the LORD.” (2 Chronicles 20:18. ) Jesus himself prostrated and
prayed to God, begging for His assistance and mercy; differentiating and
subordinating his will from the supreme will of his Lord: “And He went a little
beyond them, and fell on His face and prayed, saying, ‘My Father, if it is
possible, let this cup pass from Me; yet not as I will, but as You will’.”
(Mathew 26:39)
Our aspiration shall be to imitate the prophets and messengers
of God. All of them from Adam, Noah, Abraham, Isaac, Ishmael, Moses
to Jesus and Muhammad, directed their prayers and supplications exclusively to
the Lord Creator of Heavens and Earth and to nothing or nobody else. Let us
then offer our prayers and sacrifices, as well as our life and death, to
our Creator and Sustainer. He instructs us to say: “Surely my prayer
and my sacrifice and my life and my death are (all) for Allah, the Lord of the
worlds” (Qur’an 6:162)
The heart of our spiritual practice is prayer. Its
recurrent practice provides immediate palpable worldly results as “…
surely prayer keeps (one) away from indecency and evil” (Qur’an 29:45)
Prayer is a genuine and evident miraculous instrument ; very clear and also
esoteric; sometimes is silent or audible; but in all circumstances it is
received and taken care of by the One God who is As Sami – the
All Hearing.
Prayer is bestowed with an immense and particular spiritual
dimension: on one hand it is simple and accessible to every believer; and on
the other hand, prayer is of such depth, significance and consequence that it
compels philosophers to humble their knowledge.